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Wednesday 21st March 2012

Spotted: Aston Martin V8 Vantage

Perhaps not the greatest or fastest of Astons, but it looks so good it's hard not to be tempted

Hard to quite believe that the V8 Vantage is now seven years old - it's a testament to a brilliant styling exercise that the car still looks so clean and fresh. For many, the baby Aston remains a better looking car than the new 991 and, given how important looks are to most people in the market for a slinky coupe, that still makes it one of the 911's strongest rivals.

The Vantage never quite matched the 997 in any key dynamic area - that it got so close and is so beautiful made it a runaway sales success in 2005/2006. Seems like a long time ago now, doesn't it - easy credit everywhere.

I stumbled across a key part of the Vantage's development history a few years back, in the form of a 997 Carrera being offered for sale.

It was the car Aston had bought for R&D purposes. Presumably they gave it some death, drew as much data as possible from it and then unscrewed every nut and bolt to see what it was all about. I know this last bit to be true because the car came up for sale in bits.

Anyways, prices of early Vantages have certainly firmed-up over the past 18 months. For a while in 2008 the 4.7 Volante was the fastest-depreciating vehicle in Glass's Guide, but as is often the case the fall went too far, very few newer cars were being registered and prices began to rise. Good, early 4.3-litre coupes were low-20s in the trade two years ago, they're about the same now.

I never quite gelled with the way the Vantage drove - it was quite lazy in direction changes, but the steering was quite fast. Then there was the fact that M3s could have you in a straight line, which was unfortunate because with that fuse removed it sounded like Thrust SSC. A little too much flatulence and too little actual muscle.

There are very few genuine 360-degree cars: machines that sparkle however you view them, but this is one of them. For that reason alone I've often wanted to own one. They still look great value and of course Aston's limited resources mean that there's no replacement planned any time soon, so there's an element of future-proofing going on here that should keep prices of cars like this pretty solid.

For the same money as an over-specced Golf GTI, it's an absolute steal.